Multi-component avalanches for rock- and ice-falls to potential debris flow transition modelling

Rock/ice avalanches are complex gravitational flows involving three important physicalprocesses: entrainment, phase-changes, and flow transitions. The basic complexity of modelling rock/ice avalanches lies in the fact that the flow is a mixture of rock, ice, water, snow, soil sediments. The interact...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Munch Jessica, Bartelt Perry, Christen Marc
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2023-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2023/52/e3sconf_dfhm82023_01017.pdf
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Summary:Rock/ice avalanches are complex gravitational flows involving three important physicalprocesses: entrainment, phase-changes, and flow transitions. The basic complexity of modelling rock/ice avalanches lies in the fact that the flow is a mixture of rock, ice, water, snow, soil sediments. The interaction of these components can lead to flow transitions which is difficult to model with simplified flow rheologies. For example, a flow initially composed of rocks and ice can transition into a long-runout debris flow, dependent on the entrainment of water, water-saturated sediments and/or snow. The dynamic behaviour of rock/ice avalanches is therefore highly difficult to predict because the flow mixture is dependent on the hydrological and geomorphological properties along the avalanche track. These properties can vary from year to year but even from season to season. The problem is intensified by the fact that frictional shearing can produce enough heat energy to melt ice and snow, leading to additional water in the flow. In this contribution, we present a new RAMMS module specifically designed to simulate single- and multicomponent avalanches of rock, ice, water, snow, and ice. The rheology of the flow is treated by using the concept of component activation energy. The model includes both snow and sediment/water/ice entrainment modules. A unique feature of the model is that it tracks the temperature of the rock, ice and water phases and therefore can treat phase changes. We apply the model on the Chamoli case-study to highlight the potential and present limitations of the model..
ISSN:2267-1242